Well, I Changed the Pickups in my Casino Today...
Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2021 9:43 pm
Since I'm at a stand-still with the Ibanez pickup swap until the height adjustment screws that @tobijohn sent me arrive, I decided to kill an afternoon swapping the pickups on my Casino. I wasn't really planning to do it. I had had the stock pickups rewound by @Buddha Pickups, and they sounded great. After I replaced the stock speaker in my SCX2 with a Weber, they sounded even better! Now, I usually adhere to the philosophy of: "if a guitar sounds good already, don't mess with it", but I've had these Gibson P90s in a drawer for some time, and I just couldn't resist the curiosity to hear what they sound like in the Casino. I used to own an Elitist Casino, which came stock with Gibson P90s, and I thought maybe if I put a set of Gibson P90s in this guitar, that would make it kind of a poor-man's Elitist.
I've also been wanting to replace the chromed metal pickup covers with black plastic ones for some time, and finally found a set that would work with the Casino, but I ran into a problem that for some reason didn't even occur to me until I put the Gibson pickup in the dog-ear cover:
This is a soap-bar P90, not a Dog-Ear P90! How am I going to attach the cover to the pickup?? I know! I'll attach it with screws, the way you do with a soap-bar cover!
But wait, these covers have no screw holes! Oh noooos!
Ok, I can drill holes in the covers for the screws, but that's a real dicey operation. These holes would have to be bang-on centered in between the holes for the pole pieces. There's just barely enough clearance between the pole-pieces for the screw head to fit between them, so there's like ZERO margin for error. If the holes are off just the slightest bit, then the head of the mounting screw will hit one of the pole-pieces to the left or right of it and won't set flush to the cover.
I figured I could use the holes in the pickups as a guide for the drill bit, but I found there was a bit of wiggle room in the hole, and I couldn't be sure if the bit was positioned properly. If I used a bigger drill bit, it wouldn't be able to wiggle around in the hole as much, and I'd get more accurate placement, but I was afraid the hole it would make would be too big... Then I had an idea... I could use the bigger bit to start a hole, and make divot that I could use to position the smaller bit.
The smaller bit dropped right in there and I completed the holes... Placement was just about perfect.
I repeated the procedure on the other cover, and I was back in bidness... I also painted the heads of the mounting screws black so they would blend in better. Here it is installed:
While the pickup covers I got were angled correctly for the Casino, I knew they weren't gong to be tall enough, so I ordered a set of black, dog-ear P90 shims in various thicknesses from Mojotone, and they worked out great. They didn't exactly match the shape of the dog-ears of the cover, but you can't even tell unless you're a couple inches away from it. It doesn't bother me.
Here's the guitar strung up with pickups installed. I really prefer the look of the black covers over the chrome ones. I left the knobs off because I want to get a set of black reflector knobs to replace the gold ones.
Ok, pretty good so far, but how do they sound?
Well.... Not bad... But not what I was expecting.
These pickups are very strong in the mids. The sound is very dense and solid. It hits you like a load of bricks, and I'm sure they would sound fantastic at high gain, but this is not a high-gain guitar! If these were in a Les Paul Junior or a Special, it would be a world-beater, but they don't have any of the chime, sparkle or depth that Tim's rewinds have, so I'm gpoing to put them back in, and I'll put the Gibsons in the P90 baritone Strat that I'm building. I'd like to still use the black covers, but there's an awful lot of solder holding these pickups in the chrome covers, and I don't know if I want to wrangle with that.
I also just realized that it's probably impossible to mount a plastic cover to these anyway, as there's no way to attach the tabs to the covers, and there are no holes in these pickups for mounting with screws. So unless I want to drill two screw-holes through these pickups (I don't, really), I guess I'm stuck with the chrome covers.
I've also been wanting to replace the chromed metal pickup covers with black plastic ones for some time, and finally found a set that would work with the Casino, but I ran into a problem that for some reason didn't even occur to me until I put the Gibson pickup in the dog-ear cover:
This is a soap-bar P90, not a Dog-Ear P90! How am I going to attach the cover to the pickup?? I know! I'll attach it with screws, the way you do with a soap-bar cover!
But wait, these covers have no screw holes! Oh noooos!
Ok, I can drill holes in the covers for the screws, but that's a real dicey operation. These holes would have to be bang-on centered in between the holes for the pole pieces. There's just barely enough clearance between the pole-pieces for the screw head to fit between them, so there's like ZERO margin for error. If the holes are off just the slightest bit, then the head of the mounting screw will hit one of the pole-pieces to the left or right of it and won't set flush to the cover.
I figured I could use the holes in the pickups as a guide for the drill bit, but I found there was a bit of wiggle room in the hole, and I couldn't be sure if the bit was positioned properly. If I used a bigger drill bit, it wouldn't be able to wiggle around in the hole as much, and I'd get more accurate placement, but I was afraid the hole it would make would be too big... Then I had an idea... I could use the bigger bit to start a hole, and make divot that I could use to position the smaller bit.
The smaller bit dropped right in there and I completed the holes... Placement was just about perfect.
I repeated the procedure on the other cover, and I was back in bidness... I also painted the heads of the mounting screws black so they would blend in better. Here it is installed:
While the pickup covers I got were angled correctly for the Casino, I knew they weren't gong to be tall enough, so I ordered a set of black, dog-ear P90 shims in various thicknesses from Mojotone, and they worked out great. They didn't exactly match the shape of the dog-ears of the cover, but you can't even tell unless you're a couple inches away from it. It doesn't bother me.
Here's the guitar strung up with pickups installed. I really prefer the look of the black covers over the chrome ones. I left the knobs off because I want to get a set of black reflector knobs to replace the gold ones.
Ok, pretty good so far, but how do they sound?
Well.... Not bad... But not what I was expecting.
These pickups are very strong in the mids. The sound is very dense and solid. It hits you like a load of bricks, and I'm sure they would sound fantastic at high gain, but this is not a high-gain guitar! If these were in a Les Paul Junior or a Special, it would be a world-beater, but they don't have any of the chime, sparkle or depth that Tim's rewinds have, so I'm gpoing to put them back in, and I'll put the Gibsons in the P90 baritone Strat that I'm building. I'd like to still use the black covers, but there's an awful lot of solder holding these pickups in the chrome covers, and I don't know if I want to wrangle with that.
I also just realized that it's probably impossible to mount a plastic cover to these anyway, as there's no way to attach the tabs to the covers, and there are no holes in these pickups for mounting with screws. So unless I want to drill two screw-holes through these pickups (I don't, really), I guess I'm stuck with the chrome covers.